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DOI: 10.1177/0146167203261883
OpenAccess: Closed
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The Independent Effects of Goal Contents and Motives on Well-Being: It’s Both What You Pursue and Why You Pursue It

Kennon M. Sheldon,Richard M. Ryan,Edward L. Deci,Tim Kasser

Psychology
Happiness
Social psychology
2004
The assertion that both the content of goals and the motives behind goals affect psychological well-being has been controversial. Three studies examined this issue directly, showing that both what goals people pursue (i.e., whether they strive for extrinsic vs. intrinsic goal contents) and why people pursue them (i.e., whether they strive for autonomous vs. controlled motives) make significant independent contributions to psychological well-being. The pattern emerged in between-person and within-person studies of cross-sectional well-being and also emerged in a year-long study of prospective change in well-being. Implications for prescriptive theories of happiness are discussed.
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    The Independent Effects of Goal Contents and Motives on Well-Being: It’s Both What You Pursue and Why You Pursue It” is a paper by Kennon M. Sheldon Richard M. Ryan Edward L. Deci Tim Kasser published in 2004. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.